It’s okay to admit you were wrong about this. It’s okay to change your mind.
It’s okay to admit you reacted inappropriately to the news of what happened on October 7 and advocated some Israeli responses that you should not have advocated.
It’s okay to admit that you were wrong to cheer when the bombs started landing on Gaza.
It’s okay to admit you were wrong about the longstanding debate over Palestinian rights.
It’s okay to admit that you shared some things online that you now regret sharing.
I say this because there are probably a lot of pro-Israel people looking at what’s happening in Gaza and starting to feel a bit dissonant about it. Like maybe they’re on the wrong side of this thing after all.
And I just want to reassure you that you can change your position on this. It’s perfectly fine and normal to do so.
In Caitlin’s Newsletter
in Caitlin’s Newsletter
in Caitlin’s Newsletter
Isn’t it strange seeing the same oddly specific word choice inserted over and over and over again about the same event in statements by politicians and pundits, regardless of their political affiliation? When you lay them all out together it starts to sound highly suspicious, like someone always referring to his car as “my car, which I did not steal,” or always introducing his spouse as “my wife, whom I do not beat.” It’s clear by now that whenever you see the word “unprovoked” being forcefully repeated in a uniform way across the entire political/media class, whatever they’re talking about was definitely massively provoked.